History of medicine and health care 2013 Honors College; History 1090; Sociology 1488; shrs 2906 coordinators: Jonathon Erlen, Ph. D. 648-8927-office



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August 30 Friday


Hippocratic Medical Concepts and Greek Health Care
http://www.in-ta.net/info/aesculapius/
http://www.indiana.edu/~ancmed/plague.htm
Medicine and Western Civilization. “Hippocrates.” pp. 43, 139, 261.
Medicine and Western Civilization. “Aristotle.” p. 79.
Medicine and Western Civilization. “Plato.” p. 48.
“Ancient medical fees.” Reprinted from September 10, 1898 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1998, 280(12): 1034.
Dulles, Charles W. “The treatment of hydrophobia, historically and practically considered.” JAMA, 1887, 3(7): 169-180.

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Temkin, Oswei. "Greek medicine as science and craft." ISIS, 1953 (44): 213-225.
Bailey, James E. “Asklepios: Ancient hero of medical caring.” Annals of Internal Medicine 1996 (124): 257-263.

Longrigg, James. “Death and epidemic diseases in classical Athens.” In Death and Disease in the Ancient City, pp. 55-64.


Edelstein, L. "The Hippocratic physician." In Ancient Medicine. Selected papers of Ludwig Edelstein. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press, 1967. pp. 87-110.
King, L.S. "Plato's concepts of medicine." Journal of the History of Medicine 1954 (9): 38-48.
Gundert, Bert. “Parts and their roles in Hippocratic medicine.” ISIS 1992 (83): 453-465.

Hughes, Jessica. “Fragmentation as Metaphor in the Classical Healing Sanctuary.” Social History of Medicine 2008 (21): 217-236.



Majno, Guido. "The Iatros." In The Healing Hand. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1975, pp. 141-206.
Scarborough, John. "Classical antiquity: Medicine and allied sciences." Trends in History. 1979 (2): 3-14.
Horstmanshoff, H.F.J. "The ancient physician: Craftsman or scientist?" Journal of the History of Medicine 1990 (45): 176-197.
Von Staden, Heinrich. "The discovery of the body: Human dissection and its cultural contents in ancient Greece." Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine 1992 (65): 223-241.
Nutton, Vivian. "The medical meeting place." in Ancient Medicine in Its Socio-Cultural Context. Atlanta: Rodopi, 1995. Volume 1, pp. 3-26.
Pleket, H.W. "The social status of physicians in the Graeco-Roman world." in Ancient Medicine in Its Socio-Cultural Context. Atlanta: Rodopi, 1995. Volume 1, pp. 27-34.
Longrigg, James. "Medicine and the Lyceum." in Ancient Medicine in Its Socio-Cultural Context. Atlanta: Rodopi, 1995. Volume 2, pp. 431-446.
Nutton, Vivian. “What’s in an oath?” Journal of the Royal College of Physicians of London. 1995, 29 (6): 518-524.
Von Staden, Heinrich. “In a pure and holy way: Personal and professional conduct in the Hippocratic Oath?” Journal of the History of Medicine 1996 (51): 404-437.
Flemming, Rebecca, Hanson, Ann E. “Hippocrates’ Periparthenion (Diseases of Young Girls’): Text and translation.” Early Science and Medicine, 1998, 3(3): 241-251.
Parker, Holt N. “Women doctors in Greece, Rome, and the Byzantine Empire.” In Women Healers and Physicians: Climbing a Long Hill, Lilian R. Furst, ed. Pp. 131-151.
Wilcox, Robert A.; and Whitham, Emma M. “The symbol of modern medicine: Why one snake is more than two.” Annals of Internal Medicine 2003 (138): 673-677.
Scarborough, John. "Doctors and medicine: From Homer to Vesalius." Videotape housed in Falk Library in the CMC (this tape cannot be used for a book review).
Compton, Michael T. “The Association of Hygieia with Asklepios in Graeco-Roman Asklepieion Medicine.” Journal of the History of Medicine 2002 (57): 312-329.
Rocca, Julius. “Evaluating Hippocrates the Younger.” Early Science and Medicine, 2004, 9(4): 338-347.
North, John. “Aristotle’s empiricism.” Early Science and Medicine, 2005, 10(1): 91-97.
von Staden, Heinrich. “Experiments on Animals in Ancient Greece and Rome: Private and Public Science.” http://video.ias.edu/ancient-animal-experiments.
Manetti, Daniela. “In the shadow of Hellenistic medicine.”

http://classicsconfidential.co.uk/2013/02/03/in-the-shadow-of-hellenistic-medicine-with-daniela-manetti/
Pormann, Peter; and Nutton, Vivian. “On the Hippocratic Oath.”

http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b014gdqq/In_Our_Time_The_Hippocratic_Oath/

September 2 Monday Labor Day No Class
September 4 Wednesday

Alexandrian and Roman Medical Practices to Galen
Medicine and Western Civilization. “Galen.” p.17.

Maughs, G. M. B.G. “What the ancients knew concerning obstetrics and gynaecology.” JAMA, 1884, 2(9): 225-233.


“Ancient problems of pharmacy and their warning.” Reprinted from February 18, 1911 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1911, 305(7): 722.
Dulles, Charles W. “The treatment of hydrophobia, historically and practically considered.” JAMA, 1887, 3(7): 169-180.
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Phillips, J. H. "The emergence of the Greek medical profession in the Roman republic." Transactions and Studies of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia 1980 (4): 267-275.
Majno, Guido. The Healing Hand. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1975, ch. 8-9.
Scarborough, John. "Galen redivivus: An essay review." Journal of the History of Medicine 1988 (43): 313-321.
Spivak, Betty S. "A.C. Celsus: Roman medicus." Journal of the History of Medicine 1991 (46): 143-157.
Riddle, John M. "Folk tradition and folk medicine: Recognition of drugs in classical antiquity." In Folklore and Folk Medicines. Madison, WI: American Institute of the History of Pharmacy, 1987, pp. 33-61.
Scarborough, John. "Roman medicine and public health." In Public Health, ed. by Teizo Ogawa, pp. 33-74.
Nutton Vivian. "Humoralism." in Companion Encyclopedia of the History of Medicine. v. 1: 281-291.
Nutton, Vivian. "Galen at the bedside: The methods of a medical detective." in Medicine and the Five Senses. pp. 7-16.
Von Staden, Heinrich. "Anatomy as rhetoric: Galen on dissection and Persuasion." Journal of the History of Medicine 1995 (50): 47-66.
Pelligrino, Edmund D.; and Pelligrino, Alice H. "Humanism and ethics in Roman medicine: Translation and commentary on a text of Scribonius Largus." in The Persisting Osler II. Malabar, Fl: Krieger Publishing Co. pp. 21-34.
Gordon, Richard. "The healing event in Graeco-Roman folk-medicine." in Ancient Medicine in Its Socio- Cultural Context. Atlanta: Rodopi, 1995. Volume 2: 363-376.
Nutton, Vivian. “Healers in the medical market place: Toward a social history of Graeco-Roman medicine.” in Andrew Wear, ed. Medicine in Society: Historical Essays. Pp. 15-58.
Mattern, Susan P. “Physicians and the Roman imperial aristocracy: The patronage of therapeutics.” Bulletin of the History of Medicine 1999 (73): 1-18.
Nutton, Vivian. “Medical thought on urban pollution.” In Death and Disease in the Ancient City, Pp. 65-73.
Baker, Patricia. “Roman medical instruments: Archaeological interpretations of their possible ‘non-functional’ uses.” Social History of Medicine 2004 (17): 3-21.
Totelin, Laurence M. V. “Mithradates’ antidote-a pharmaceutical ghost.” Early Science and Medicine, 2004, 9(1): 1-19.
Cooper, Glen M. “Galen and astrology: A misalliance?” Early Science and Medicine, 2011, 16: 120-146.
Pilkington, Nathan. “Growing up Roman: Infant morality and reproductive development.” Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 2013, 45(1): 1-35.
September 6 Friday

Contributions of Byzantine and Arabic Medical Science and Scholarship
http://www.nlm.nih.gov/exhibition/islamic_medical/islamic_00.html
Maughs, G. M. B.G. “What the ancients knew concerning obstetrics and gynaecology.” JAMA, 1884, 2(9): 225-233.
Dulles, Charles W. “The treatment of hydrophobia, historically and practically considered.” JAMA, 1887, 3(7): 169-180.
___________________________________________________________________________________________
Hamarneh, S. "The physician and the health professions in medieval Islam." Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine 1971 (47): 1088-1110.
Nutton, Vivian. “God, Galen and the depaganization of ancient medicine.” In Religion and Medicine in the Middle Ages, York: York Medieval Press, 2001, pp. 15-32.
Scarborough, John. "Introduction." Symposium on Byzantine Medicine. Washington: Dumbarton Oaks Research Library, 1985, pp. ix-xvi.
Dols, Michael W. "The origins of the Islamic hospital: myth and reality." Bulletin of the History of Medicine 1987(61): 367-390.
French, Roger. “Foretelling the future: Arabic astrology and English medicine in the late twelfth century.” ISIS 1996 (87): 453-480.

Bennett, David. “Medical practice and manuscripts in Byzantium.” Society for the Social History of Medicine 2000 (13): 279-271.

Bos, Gerrit. “Ibn al-Jazzar on women's diseases and their treatment. Medical History 1993 (37): 296-312.

Pormann, Peter E. “The physician and the other: Images of the charlatan in Medieval Islam.” ." Bulletin of the History of Medicine 2005(79): 189-227.


Savage-Smith, E. "Gleanings from an Arabist's workshop. Current trends in the study of medieval Islamic science and medicine." ISIS 1988 (297): 246-272.
Savage-Smith, Emilie. "Attitudes toward dissection in medieval Islam." Journal of the History of Medicine 1995 (50): 67-110.
Conrad, Lawrence I. "Arab-Islamic medicine." in Companion Encyclopedia of the History of Medicine. v. 1, pp. 676-727.
Lloyd, Geoffrey E. R. “Galen on Hellenistics and Hippocrateans: Contemporary battles and past authorities.” in Galen und das Hellenistische Erbe. 1993, pp. 125-143.
Horden, Peregrin. “The earliest hospitals in Byzantium, Western Europe, and Islam.” Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 2005, 35(3): 361-389.
Lev, Efram; and Amar, Zohar. “Practice versus Theory: Medieval Materia Medica according to the Cairo Genizah.” Medical History 2007 (51): 507-526.
Bennett, David. “Medical practice and manuscripts in Byzantium.” Social History of Medicine 2000(2): 279-291.
Alvarez-Millan, Cristina. “Practice versus theory: Tenth-century case histories from the Islamic Middle East.” Social History of Medicine 2000(2): 293-306.
Savage-Smith, Emilie. “The practice of surgery in Islamic lands: Myth and reality.” Social History of Medicine 2000(2): 307-321.
Dols, Michael. “The Black Death in the Middle East.” Lehfeldt, Elizabeth A., ed. The Black Death, pp.115-121.
Perho, Irmeli. “The Prophet’s medicine: A creation of the Muslim tradionalist scholars. In Studia Orientalia, 1995(74): 44-52.
Savage-Smith, Emilie. “The exchange of medical and surgical ideas between Europe and Islam.” In The Diffusion of Greco-Roman Medicine into the Middle East and the Caucasus. Delmar, N.Y.: Caravan Books, 1999. pp. 27-55.
Pormann, Peter E. “The art of medicine: Female patients and practitioners in medieval Islam.” The Lancet , 373(May 9, 2009): 1598-1599.
Mossensohn, Miri Shefer. “A tale of two discourses: The historiography of Ottoman-Muslim medicine.” Social History of Medicine 2008 (21): 1-12.
Millan, Christina Alvarez. “The case history in Medieval Islamic medical literature: Tajārib and Mujarrabāt as Source.” Medical History 2010 (54): 195-214.
Gadelrab, Sherry S. “Discourses on sex differences in Medieval scholarly Islamic thought.” Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 2011 (66): 40-81.
Chipman, Leigh N.; and Lev, Efraim. “Take a Lame and Decrepit Female Hyena...: A Genizah Study of Two Additional Fragments of Sābūr Ibn Sahl’s al-Aqrābādhīn al-aghīr.” Early Science and Medicine, 2008, 13:361-383.
Sabra, A. I. “The “Commentary” that saved the text. The hazardous Journey of Ibn al-Haytham’s Arabic Optics.Early Science and Medicine, 2007, 12: 117-133.
Bela, Zbiginew. “Who invented ‘Avicenna’s gilded pills’?” Early Science and Medicine, 2006, 11(1): 1-10.
Langermann, Y. Tzvi. “Criticism of authority in the writings of Moses Maimonides and Fakha al –Din-Razi.” Early Science and Medicine, 2002, 7(3): 255-274.
Gutas, Dimitri. “Certainty, doubt, error: Comments on the epistemological foundations of medieval Arabic science.” Early Science and Medicine, 2002, 7(3):276-288.
Grasshoff, Gerd. “Contextualizing the history of Islamic sciences.” Early Science and Medicine, 2002, 7(3): 300-310.



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